Health care financing challenges in the Pacific: priority setting and resource allocation
Abstract
As explained in the Introduction, Pacific Islands Countries
(PICs) have some of the highest rates of Non-Communicable
Diseases (NCDs) in the world, and also face severe fiscal
constraints. The original research contained in this thesis by
compilation aims to address knowledge gaps, and help PIC
governments respond to the emerging NCD crisis.
Chapter 2 investigates the health financing options available to
governments in five PICs. The share of government expenditure
going to health in these countries is already some of the highest
in the world. Most options available to middle-income countries
globally to increase the fiscal space for health are unavailable,
or inappropriate, to PICs. Improving allocative and technical
efficiency in existing government health expenditure is the most
feasible option left for PICs.
Chapters 3 and 4 use two case studies to better understand the
budgetary pressures that, given the above fiscal constraints,
NCDs will increasingly impose in the Pacific and to raise
fundamental questions about the cost-effectiveness and
sustainability of health financing in the Pacific. Chapter 3, as
well as re-considering the fiscal options of Chapter 2 in the
context of Samoa, finds that dialysis treatment per patient in
Samoa is twelve times the GDP per capita, user fees cover just
1.6% of the program, and two-thirds of patients die within two
years. Chapter 4 investigates the cost to government of
purchasing drugs to prevent and treat diabetes and hypertension
in Vanuatu. Government pharmaceutical costs rise in large,
step-wise, patterns as diabetes or hypertension progressively
becomes more severe. About 20% of the population in Vanuatu has
three or more risk factors for acquiring diabetes, but only 1.3%
of the total population could be treated with insulin before the
total Government drug budget for the country was fully spent.
Chapter 5 finds that, contrary to general perceptions, the
population of the PICs is “ageing” (i.e. the share of the
population aged 60 years + is increasing). Current health systems
are poorly designed to respond to their health needs. Ageing,
combined with the high birth rates in many PICs, is likely to
worsen the “dependency ratio” in countries, putting further
strain on government budgets. This is exacerbated for those PICs
with high levels of out-migration.
With limited financing options (Chapter 2), prohibitively
expensive treatment protocols (Chapters 3 and 4), and an ageing
population (Chapter 5), a strong case for any budgetary
interventions is needed. Chapter 6 identifies, based on a
literature survey and stakeholder views, how Ministries of Health
can improve their capacity to negotiate better health financing
from Ministries of Finance, and development partners. It
identifies ten attributes of effective budget requests.
The academic contribution of the thesis is to help fill the
research gap relating to the effectiveness and sustainability of
NCD and other health care costs in the Pacific. The policy
contribution is to provide the analysis underpinning the
Pacific’s response to the NCD crisis. The “NCD Road Map”,
which I drafted and which Pacific governments have now approved,
is summarized in the Conclusion.
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